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Trojans, Sun Devils clash in Tempe — See SPORTS
Volume XCIX, Number 19
University of Southern California
Friday, September 27, 1985
Student arrested after alleged attack with bottle
By Diane Diaz
Assistant City Editor
A university student who allegedly hit another student over the head with a beer bottle on Sept. 6 was arrested Tuesday in the Seeley G. Mudd building for assault with a deadly weapon.
"The arrest was pursuant to an arrest warrant charging 245A1, assault with a deadly weapon with a beer bottle," said Loren Zimmerman, a Los Angeles Police Department detective at the Southwest division.
Zimmerman said that Doyle Richmond was arrested and transported to the Southwest Division station, where he was booked. At about 2 p.m., Richmond posted S5.000 bail and was released, Zimmerman said.
Richmond will be arraigned on Oct. 7, at which time he will enter a plea. A preliminary trial will be set within 10 days of the arraignment, Zimmerman said.
University Security assisted LAPD detectives in serving a warrant for Richmond's arrest.
"We were there to show them where the classroom was that they were looking for," said Sgt. Hermin Aviles of security. "They had the victim of the ADW (assault with a deadly weapon) with them in order to point out the suspect," he said.
"Mr. Richmond, during a bar fight at the 32nd Street Saloon, hit David Severino in the left eye, causing a laceration of the cornea," Zimmerman said.
"After interviewing two witnesses, I presented the case to Deputy District Attorney Savitt, who filed one count of assault with a deadly weapon."
"It was not a barroom brawl," said Severino, son of John Severino, vice president of ABC's owned-and-operated television stations.
"I had my back turned to him and he hit me. I didn't even talk to this guy.
"After he hit me, I saw him standing there and then I had witnesses say they saw him hit me," Severino explained.
"I know who he is. I've known of him for four or five years, but we were never friends and never enemies."
When aked why he thought Richmond hit him with the bottle, Severino said "he was really, really drunk. I have no idea why he did it, though."
Severino said he reported the incident to security the next day and that security then went to LAPD.
"I have cuts. They are visible and I'll probably have to have something done about them," he said.
Richmond could not be reached for comment.
Parliament member to speak
Labor unions to be discussed
Social Security celebrates 50th
By Glenn Wakai
Staff Writer
Mayor Tom Bradley and Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fla., will be among the speakers on campus Sunday for the gala celebration of the 50th anniversary of Social Security and the 20th anniversary of Medicare.
In addition to Bradley and Pepper, scheduled speakers include Larry McCormick, a KTLA
anchorman; Supervisor Edmund Edelman; Rep. Ed Roybal, D-Calif.; and Julianna Roosevelt, a great-granddaugh-ter of the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The event will begin at VonK-leinSmid Center at 2 p.m. and entertainment will be provided by the Ink Spots, Christian Edition and other musicians.
(Continued on page 2)
ROGER GALE
UCLA game lottery under way
By Beth Laski
Staff Writer
Lottery coupons for the UCLA game will be accepted in the ticket office, STU 200, until Oct. 21.
There will be no general admission for this game, to be played Nov. 23 at the Coliseum, and the only way to obtain tickets is through the lottery process.
The ticket office is open from 9 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday.
The coupons, which should be brought in in groups of one through
16, will be placed in serially numbered envelopes.
The student who drops off the coupons will be given a claim stub with the same serial number as the one on the envelope.
The stub is the student's receipt and it must be presented when picking up the tickets.
After the lottery closes on Oct. 21, all envelopes will be thoroughly mixed and then randomly filled with tickets.
Envelopes will be available for pick-up Nov. 13 through 15 in the ticket office.
By Carrie Brown
Staff Writer
Speaking on campus Wednesday, a member of the House of Commons expressed hope for England's trade industry, now in the wake of a labor union strike, and support for a British Broadcasting Corporation censorship decision that led to a one-day news blackout during the summer.
Roger Gale, speaking informally to an open public administration class, said, "(I'm) 100 percent optimistic about the future of British industry."
His optimism, however, was tempered by his staunch conservative outlook. He admitted that, as a conservative, he is the enemy of trade unions.
Gale described himself as having an "odd pedigree" because, although he holds a conservative perspective, he is a member of four trade unions, mostly actors' and production unions.
Gale said that the decline in British industry over the past 30 years is the result of bad union practice and bad trade management.
"Trade unionism has to grow up,” Gale said. The government, following the nearly yearlong union strike which ended last March, has "introduced a sense of reality to trade unions,'' he said.
The strike began in early 1984 when the National Coal Board announced they were closing pits that were no longer profitable.
Gale said the strike collapsed because labor leaders lacked sufficient support from the workers.
"The miner" s union will never be the same again," he said.
Gale also talked about August's 24-hour BBC strike, which came about when the board of the state-owned network decided against airing a documentary about Northern (Continued on page 2)
Substitute residence hall senators chosen
Becktold and Salerno replaced
F. PAUL PELLEGRINO DAILY TROJAN
LARRY HROCH
By Nancie Mack
Assistant Gty Editor
Replacements have been found for two residence hall senators who resigned last week because they are no longer living in their constituencies, but the housing office said Wednesday that Tom Becktold was offered housing in Trojan Hall and turned it down.
Becktold, a former senator, said last week that he resigned because he could not find available university housing, and therefore could not properly represent his constituency.
David Blackmar, assistant housing director, said Becktold
was offered a space in Trojan Hall last July and turned it down.
Tony Salerno said he resigned because he has pledged a fraternity.
Becktold and Salerno, who announced their resignations at last Wednesday's Student Senate meeting, have been replaced by Bill Fisher and Larry Hroch.
Fisher, a sophomore majoring in business, has lived in Pardee Tower for the last two years. He was president of the tower and a member of the Residence Halls Coordinating Council his freshman year, and has worked on activities such as last year's Val-
entine's Day Cruise.
Fisher said he wanted to move to a position higher than president of a residence hall, so last year he ran for one of four undergraduate, residence hall senate seats.
Hroch, a Touton Hall resident advisor and RHCC member, said he ran for the senate seat last year because senate is the only government RAs can become involved in. A junior majoring in English and philosophy, he has lived in Touton for three years and first became a RA last semester.
Although Fisher and Hroch (Continued on page 2)
JOY GOLDEN'D AIL Y TROJAN
BILL FISHER

Trojans, Sun Devils clash in Tempe — See SPORTS
Volume XCIX, Number 19
University of Southern California
Friday, September 27, 1985
Student arrested after alleged attack with bottle
By Diane Diaz
Assistant City Editor
A university student who allegedly hit another student over the head with a beer bottle on Sept. 6 was arrested Tuesday in the Seeley G. Mudd building for assault with a deadly weapon.
"The arrest was pursuant to an arrest warrant charging 245A1, assault with a deadly weapon with a beer bottle," said Loren Zimmerman, a Los Angeles Police Department detective at the Southwest division.
Zimmerman said that Doyle Richmond was arrested and transported to the Southwest Division station, where he was booked. At about 2 p.m., Richmond posted S5.000 bail and was released, Zimmerman said.
Richmond will be arraigned on Oct. 7, at which time he will enter a plea. A preliminary trial will be set within 10 days of the arraignment, Zimmerman said.
University Security assisted LAPD detectives in serving a warrant for Richmond's arrest.
"We were there to show them where the classroom was that they were looking for," said Sgt. Hermin Aviles of security. "They had the victim of the ADW (assault with a deadly weapon) with them in order to point out the suspect," he said.
"Mr. Richmond, during a bar fight at the 32nd Street Saloon, hit David Severino in the left eye, causing a laceration of the cornea," Zimmerman said.
"After interviewing two witnesses, I presented the case to Deputy District Attorney Savitt, who filed one count of assault with a deadly weapon."
"It was not a barroom brawl," said Severino, son of John Severino, vice president of ABC's owned-and-operated television stations.
"I had my back turned to him and he hit me. I didn't even talk to this guy.
"After he hit me, I saw him standing there and then I had witnesses say they saw him hit me," Severino explained.
"I know who he is. I've known of him for four or five years, but we were never friends and never enemies."
When aked why he thought Richmond hit him with the bottle, Severino said "he was really, really drunk. I have no idea why he did it, though."
Severino said he reported the incident to security the next day and that security then went to LAPD.
"I have cuts. They are visible and I'll probably have to have something done about them," he said.
Richmond could not be reached for comment.
Parliament member to speak
Labor unions to be discussed
Social Security celebrates 50th
By Glenn Wakai
Staff Writer
Mayor Tom Bradley and Rep. Claude Pepper, D-Fla., will be among the speakers on campus Sunday for the gala celebration of the 50th anniversary of Social Security and the 20th anniversary of Medicare.
In addition to Bradley and Pepper, scheduled speakers include Larry McCormick, a KTLA
anchorman; Supervisor Edmund Edelman; Rep. Ed Roybal, D-Calif.; and Julianna Roosevelt, a great-granddaugh-ter of the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The event will begin at VonK-leinSmid Center at 2 p.m. and entertainment will be provided by the Ink Spots, Christian Edition and other musicians.
(Continued on page 2)
ROGER GALE
UCLA game lottery under way
By Beth Laski
Staff Writer
Lottery coupons for the UCLA game will be accepted in the ticket office, STU 200, until Oct. 21.
There will be no general admission for this game, to be played Nov. 23 at the Coliseum, and the only way to obtain tickets is through the lottery process.
The ticket office is open from 9 p.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday.
The coupons, which should be brought in in groups of one through
16, will be placed in serially numbered envelopes.
The student who drops off the coupons will be given a claim stub with the same serial number as the one on the envelope.
The stub is the student's receipt and it must be presented when picking up the tickets.
After the lottery closes on Oct. 21, all envelopes will be thoroughly mixed and then randomly filled with tickets.
Envelopes will be available for pick-up Nov. 13 through 15 in the ticket office.
By Carrie Brown
Staff Writer
Speaking on campus Wednesday, a member of the House of Commons expressed hope for England's trade industry, now in the wake of a labor union strike, and support for a British Broadcasting Corporation censorship decision that led to a one-day news blackout during the summer.
Roger Gale, speaking informally to an open public administration class, said, "(I'm) 100 percent optimistic about the future of British industry."
His optimism, however, was tempered by his staunch conservative outlook. He admitted that, as a conservative, he is the enemy of trade unions.
Gale described himself as having an "odd pedigree" because, although he holds a conservative perspective, he is a member of four trade unions, mostly actors' and production unions.
Gale said that the decline in British industry over the past 30 years is the result of bad union practice and bad trade management.
"Trade unionism has to grow up,” Gale said. The government, following the nearly yearlong union strike which ended last March, has "introduced a sense of reality to trade unions,'' he said.
The strike began in early 1984 when the National Coal Board announced they were closing pits that were no longer profitable.
Gale said the strike collapsed because labor leaders lacked sufficient support from the workers.
"The miner" s union will never be the same again," he said.
Gale also talked about August's 24-hour BBC strike, which came about when the board of the state-owned network decided against airing a documentary about Northern (Continued on page 2)
Substitute residence hall senators chosen
Becktold and Salerno replaced
F. PAUL PELLEGRINO DAILY TROJAN
LARRY HROCH
By Nancie Mack
Assistant Gty Editor
Replacements have been found for two residence hall senators who resigned last week because they are no longer living in their constituencies, but the housing office said Wednesday that Tom Becktold was offered housing in Trojan Hall and turned it down.
Becktold, a former senator, said last week that he resigned because he could not find available university housing, and therefore could not properly represent his constituency.
David Blackmar, assistant housing director, said Becktold
was offered a space in Trojan Hall last July and turned it down.
Tony Salerno said he resigned because he has pledged a fraternity.
Becktold and Salerno, who announced their resignations at last Wednesday's Student Senate meeting, have been replaced by Bill Fisher and Larry Hroch.
Fisher, a sophomore majoring in business, has lived in Pardee Tower for the last two years. He was president of the tower and a member of the Residence Halls Coordinating Council his freshman year, and has worked on activities such as last year's Val-
entine's Day Cruise.
Fisher said he wanted to move to a position higher than president of a residence hall, so last year he ran for one of four undergraduate, residence hall senate seats.
Hroch, a Touton Hall resident advisor and RHCC member, said he ran for the senate seat last year because senate is the only government RAs can become involved in. A junior majoring in English and philosophy, he has lived in Touton for three years and first became a RA last semester.
Although Fisher and Hroch (Continued on page 2)
JOY GOLDEN'D AIL Y TROJAN
BILL FISHER